USPS will not ship coins? What's this all about?

I know this subject has been kicked around for years. However, this morning at my local Post Office I was told that USPS is no longer shipping “coins”; it’s on their “prohibited” list.

I’m a small ancient coin dealer in Virginia. The majority of coins I sell are in the $300-$3,000 price range. I want to “insure” delivery and have the coins insured for full value in case of loss.

In the past four years I have mailed 100’s of coins both domestically and internationally via the USPS.

In the last nine months I have had two separate coins sales lost in transit – in the receiving country (Germany). Although I sent them Registered with declared value, I am told that “declared value” means nothing. Subsequently, USPS rent me refunds for the postage paid ($86. for both) but nothing for the value declared ($2,100).

So now I’m in a rock/hard spot. How do I ship/mail my coins – domestically and internationally - so that they are insured for full value? I checked with UPS and was told that they will not ship ancient coins to Europe.

This happens quite a bit. In general USPS will not ship "coins" they equate that with sending cash. If you send them as numismatic items it will be fine. There are restrictions from ancients which you will need to check depending on what is being sent and the country, but also registered mail is not the way for international.

Priority mail or express mail (though right now times aren't assured) is much better for that.

Declare it as numismatic so they don't get confused that it was cash and use priority or express for it for international and just make sure there aren't country restrictions on the ancient coins. Domestically you should be fine.

Declared value use the sale price and your sales receipt will be proof of the value as I have had to make claims with classic us coins before in this manner. It may get rejected initially but can be appealed and usually works.

I would try Fedex, Roma Numismatics uses them and they are fast getting here from England 2 days!

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I agree. I always had a little more hesitancy using USPS. I have been in the manufacturing industry for 40 years, and always used FedEx for important small shipments worldwide and domestic North America with virtually no problems (samples, pre-production prototypes, tooling, dies, small shipments, test items, raw materials, production proofs, etc.) The only real issues I truly encountered was when volcanoes would erupt or spew, grounding aircraft in affected areas (Alaska, and I believe in Iceland once). Sometimes other natural disasters, like Typhoons, or man-made disasters like government coups or terrorist activities. Nothing was lost in those cases, they were just delayed because of the issues. Yes, ANYone are going to make mistakes, and I have had a very few lost-in-space shipments - but that is over 40 years. However, FedEx always had the best track record for me. Customs was rarely a problem.

I have / had FedEx accounts (different companies I was with). Use it. Track with it. Call them or email/text them. They see the volume you produce, and they will work with you to ensure you are a satisfied customer. I had a couple major personal coin shipments pending customs. They called me, handled my customs duties, took my CC info to ensure rapid shipment.

Sometimes it is amazing to consider FedEx logistics: It takes me a minimum of 16 hours to fly to Asia from North America (actual flight time - not considering waiting in airports or personal transportation to and from airports). That is half-way around the globe. I can get FedEx shipments door-to-door, and through customs in less than 48 hours total time... yeah, 2 days, and that is going through a couple government bureaucracies' customs departments, paying some duties, fees, etc...

Excellent service to me. USPS sometimes can hide behind the size and anonymity of their system to not get me answers...

I believe Herr @panzerman is a big adherent to Postal Services and no description / minimal description quite successfully with most of his gold collection...

Those are my thoughts and experiences.

I like coins. I always think it is good to post them in any thread. That is why we are here...

Here is a RR Heavy Denarius / Didrachm that looks like the silver content is being lessened due to it being struck after Hannibal destroyed several Roman Legions... in battle after battle, and Rome was hitting their lowpoint in History. Their Denarius was reformed to a smaller standard in 211 BCE.

What the OP is saying is true for international shipping to many countries, and insuring coins beyond a nominal amount is not an option for USPS. https://pe.usps.com/text/imm/immctry.htm shows what is prohibited in each country. For Germany:

Coins are currencies that can be used for buying and selling things. You can buy a token with a coin, but not vice versa. Coin operates independently, while token has a specific use in the project's ecosystem.

So, since Ancient “Coins” are no longer used as a currency or in an economy system, are the actually coins anymore?

Coins are currencies that can be used for buying and selling things. You can buy a token with a coin, but not vice versa. Coin operates independently, while token has a specific use in the project's ecosystem.

So, since Ancient “Coins” are no longer used as a currency or in an economy system, are the actually coins anymore?

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Legally, I think not. After enough time hydrogen peroxide turns to water, so even though it used to be H2O2 how it’s just H2O

Legally, I think not. After enough time hydrogen peroxide turns to water, so even though it used to be H2O2 how it’s just H2O

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Legally ancient coins have BY FAR the most laws applicable to them especially when it comes to import/export as many countries have made national significance type laws to claim them and restrict their movement

As a retired postal employee it sounds like a clerk heard or read something and in that employees mind it was exactly what they told the OP. I would suggest that @Libby007 call their local post office and speak to the postmaster to straighten this out.